In
2008, Fish and Wildlife implemented new policies and strategies for
trapping salmon hatchery fish in the lower Columbia River region. Fish
and Wildlife's Regional Fish Manager Pat Frazier explained it is
because the old methods of rearing fish in pens have had an adverse
affect on the growth of wild salmon and steelhead populations in the
lower Columbia River. The study outlined by WDFW in 2008 is to help
recover endangered and threatened wild salmon and steelhead populations
in the Columbia River. Frazier said, "These modifications are part
of a broader effort to re-tool hatchery programs in the Columbia River
basin."
Fish and Wildlife said its goal is to change
hatchery operations in ways that support naturally spawning salmon
populations and to provide sustainable fisheries for communities along
the lower Columbia River. To that end WDFW has closed both the
Elochoman and Beaver Creek salmon rearing hatchery facilities. Looking
at the bigger picture, Frazier said WDFW wants to create a new,
natural-return wild fish refuge that would be one of several
established in the lower Columbia region. The fish refuges would
support and aid the growth of the wild Chinook and Steelhead
populations that spawn in the lower Columbia tributaries. "These
refuges are intended to benefit wild salmon and steelhead populations
by minimizing the number of competing hatchery-produced fish on the
spawning grounds, while still maintaining sustainable fishing
opportunities," said Frazier. "Specifically, the changes reduce
Coho releases from hatcheries on the lower Columbia River," said
WDFW fish biologist Jeremy Wilson and establish three wild steelhead
refuges in the river. Wilson said that so far for 2009 WDFW has
trapped and removed about 2400 hatchery-reared Chinook from the
Elochoman. "We've also trapped 172 Chinook and we've
removed 132 brights that were from the Young's Bay net pen,"
said Wilson. Washington Fish and Wildlife is trying to keep the
Young's Bay fish out of the Grays because the fish are from a
totally different stock.
The new trapping polices were
developed after the steelhead and chinook salmon were listed under the
Endangered Species Act. Frazier said the research has led fish
biologists to understand that hatchery fish, though a genetically
weaker species of fish, were taking over the spawning grounds of wild
salmon through their sheer numbers. Representatives from WDFW, the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, Columbia River tribes, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA Fisheries all met to develop a
conservation-based, system-wide approach to promoting wild salmon
production. "This re-alignment of hatchery operations and
production is part of a bigger effort to restore naturally spawning
salmon and steelhead populations in the Columbia River," Frazier
said. "But other actions, such as restoring habitat, modifying
harvest and improving fish passage at dams, also need to take place if
we are going to succeed."
The hatchery modifications are
consistent with the Lower Columbia River Salmon Recovery Plan and
recommendations from the Hatchery Scientific Review Group (HSRG). The
HSGR is an independent panel of scientists established by Congress to
look at salmon hatchery operations and their impacts on wild salmon in
Washington State. The Scientific Review Group's review of what
to do about the dwindling wild salmon stocks points out that the
hatchery fish are actually responsible for the reduced productivity of
wild salmon stocks. The hatchery fish are taking over breeding areas
where wild salmon now spawn. There is also the question of habitat. Another
reason given by WDFW to trap-out competing hatchery salmon is that wild
salmon habitat along the lower Columbia has been affected by tributary
dams and sedimentation build up from logging and residential
development.
The HSRG said that until recently the majority of
salmon production in the lower Columbia had been of hatchery origin and
the domestication and/or reduction in the fitness of wild fish is due
primarily to inter-breeding with hatchery fish. In addition the
HSRG research puts hatchery salmon in direct competition with wild
salmon. The two species compete for food and habitat but because more
hatchery fish are produced than wild, the pen-reared fish overpower
wild stocks. In addition hatchery stocks, though more numerous, are
still the genetically weaker of the two breeds and often introduce
disease into the wild salmon populations.
On the up-side, to
some degree, researchers have discovered that hatchery fish do assist
wild salmon recovery efforts to some extent by providing the female
fish needed to augment a salmon run on creeks that have reached
critically low levels of wild salmon breeding. "When we trap the
fish," said Wilson,"we will often keep some of the hatchery
fish and move them to spawning grounds on creeks with low fish
returns."
Since 1954 the Elochoman hatchery has produced winter
and summer steelhead, fall chinook, and coho for harvest by sport and
commercial fishers. The WDFW say their new measure to trap hatchery
salmon will help wild species compete with the hatchery fish that tend
to migrate alongside wild salmon, along the same routes, and at the
same times. The HSRG said their biological evidence requires that
new modified-hatchery standards promote local wild salmon growth
through adaptation. Many current hatchery programs have operated in a
manner that disrupts the natural selection of salmon. Salmon evolve
according to their habitats along the Columbia and that adaptation
tends to further strengthen wild salmon stocks. Wilson said the
salmon trapping and hatchery enhancement programs on the lower Columbia
will continue for about another 10 years. The scientific forecast for
the region predicts that the next decade will see significant increases
in the numbers of wild salmon returning to the lower Columbia. The
prediction also mentions that both commercial and sports fishing
interests will experience improved fishing.